tv Americas Newsroom FOX News August 11, 2017 6:00am-8:00am PDT
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>> welcome back. you were wonderful. >> good morning everybody. president donald trump with another message for north korea saying his warning of fire and fury may not have gone far enough. sending a specific new message to kim jong-un to back off any idea of action against the united states. good friday morning here. almost made it to tend of the week. i'm bill hemmer.
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shannon. >> happy friday. i'm shannon bream. president trump with meet with ambassador nikki haley. this comes after president trump unleashes on pyongyang again during his working vacation in new jersey. >> frankly, the people that were questioning that statement was it too tough, maybe it wasn't tough enough. they've been doing this to our country for a long time, for many years. it's about time somebody stuck up for the people of this country. it's a whole new ball game. he's not going to be saying those things and he's certainly not going to be doing those things pip read about in guam by august 15th. let's see what he does with guam. he does something in guam, it will be an event the likes of which nobody has seen before what, will happen in north korea. >> so where are we this morning? rich, begin with the tweet this morning on north korea. >> reporter: good morning, bill. that's right. president trump tweeted yet another warning this morning to north korea boasting of u.s.
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capability and preparedness. tweeted ab an hour and a half ago that, quote, military slewings are fully in place, locked and loaded should north korea act unwisely. hopefully, kim jong-un will find another path. the north korean military said it's developing a plan to envelope guam in ballistic missiles. that plan according to the korean peoples army should be finished by the middle of the month. they'll present that to kim jong-un and he will decide whether to execute it. bill? >> secretary tillerson is back in the u.s. what is he saying? >> reporter: he has just returned from a trip to asia. several days on a diplomatic mission. much of it focused on north korea. trying to get allies to cut off north korea diplomatically and economically. despite two launches since the fourth of july, the state department contends this pressure campaign is actually working. state department officials say the countries that we're close friends with and countries we're
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not close friends with are helping participate in that campaign. that's because the world recognizes the threat that north korea faces, not to the united states, but also the world. if state all reports to sanctions. china and russia signed on at the u.n. security council, allowing them to pass. we asked the state department whether china is doing enough here because it is north korea's strongest ally. what they're saying is that china has been improving in its pressure on north korea, but there's still more it could do. >> strong editorial today that's getting a lot of attention. thank you, rich edson leading our coverage. shannon? >> president trump continued to speak candidly about mitch mcconnell. the president taking several questions from reporters yesterday about the kentucky senator, urging him to deliver some legislative victories. the president had this to say when asked if mcconnell should step down as the republican senate leader.
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>> if he doesn't get repeal and replace done, and if he doesn't get taxes done, meaning cuts and renormal, if he doesn't get infrastructure done, if he doesn't get that done, then you can ask me that question. >> all right. good morning to you, rick. looks like the president is keeping pressure on publicly. >> reporter: yeah, shannon, this has been a consistent message of the president, openly criticizing the senate majority leader and calling for support and results pretty much every day this week when he retweeted a couple posts from fox and friends referencing his diss of the kentucky senator and how lawmakers learn the hard way that there's fallout when they challenge the president. yesterday he tweeted ab how he had complained for seven years about repeal and replace and couldn't get it done. then in a follow-up said, get back to work. you can do it. tuesday morning he reportedly called mcconnell and spoke to
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him for ab ten minutes which not progressively more heated we're told. president criticizing the senator and demanding action which he did again yesterday afternoon. >> i'm very disappointed in mitch. but if he gets these bills passed, i'll be very happy. i'll be the first to admit it. honestly, repeal and replace of obamacare should have taken place. it should have been on my desk virtually the first week i was there, the first day. i have been hearing about it for seven years. so repeal and replace should have taken place. >> reporter: so far we have not heard a response from august of this from senator mcconnell. shannon? >> rick, sounds like this is wide ranging. the president talked about a lot of things yesterday. >> reporter: he covered a lot of ground on the front steps of his golf club, just a few minutes from our location. including the war in afghanistan, which he called a mess. said it's going to get a lot less messy.
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he also criticized iran saying they're not in compliance of a nuclear deal signed with the u.s. he spoke about the infrastructure bill saying we wasted $6 trillion in the middle east an can't fix our own roads and airports and schools. once again he also referenced his victory in november saying it had nothing to do with collusion in moscow because there was none. >> i didn't win because of russia. russia had nothing to do with me winning. we had a great team and i guess i did a good job. and you know what? honestly, they spent much more money than i did, by a lot. you know that. they spent a lot more money. honestly, they did not do a very good job of campaigning. >> reporter: on the president's schedule this afternoon, he's participating in a work shop apprenticeship discussion. then at 5:00, he's meeting with nikki haley. that meeting is closed to the press. >> all right. we'll be standing by.
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rick levinthal, thank you. >> morning. swre excessive expectations. you. these two men must find a way to work together. >> or not. i mean, you can always fail. one of the assumptions that americans have about their government and their leaders is that somehow in the end decency, goodness and patriotic duty will overwhelm their self-interest and they will do the right things and all will be good in the end. this is another situation where failure is an option. it is possible for these republicans to have taken control of both houses of congress and the presidency. >> do you think they'll tolerate that? >> who's the they? the president's attacking his senate majority leader. they're going after individual senate leaders. they don't have a very big majority. it will be in the interest of some of these senators to oppose the president.
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the president, by attacking mitch mcconnell, causes other senators to rally behind him. it makes them less likely to cooperate. they're not afraid of him. >> you've been writing a lot about the interfighting throughout the week. you've got a primary challenge in arizona. a primary challenge in nevada. we'll see how that goes. you've got people like laura ingram tweeting like this. hey, kentucky, time to tell senate majority leader mcconnell to stop rolling over for the dems, advance the trump agenda or step aside. point being, it's coming from more than just the west wing, chris. >> the belief, especially among democrats. democrats do this, too. the belief among republicans is if they only had more purity. in this case it's about obedience to the president. if the republicans were more obedient to the president, if you could get rid of the establishtarians, you could get
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your whole agenda done. mitch mcconnell is safe. he can get re-elected there again if he wants to. if you run these primary challenge, yeah, you might beat them in a primary. as we saw in indiana in 2012, you have an ugly primary, guess what you have? a general election loss. >> mitch mcconnell dragged a lot of people over the finish line. mike lee, rand paul, ted cruz. >> yep. >> rob portman. he did all that. it was burkowski and mccain ultimately that bucked him. >> murkowski was the one the president had indirectly threatened with slapping regulations back on the energy industry to hurt jobs in alaska and had pressured her publicly. she thought, i'm more popular in alaska than you are. i am going to look out for my interest and my state's interest
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and i don't care what you say. it made her more defiant than less defiant. >> i like your suit. good thing for august. stewedious. thank you, chris. >> like we couldn't think he was any smarter. >> so much for a quiet august. it ain't happening, folks? the president's gonna work right through this august recess from new jersey. more coming up. >> interesting mitch mcconnell, when asked about his relationship with the president said, it is what it is. we'll leave it there. president trump said he does not have a problem with vladamir putin ordering america's embassy staff out of moscow. >> as far as i'm concerned, i'm very thankful that he let go of a large number of people because now we have a smaller payroll. >> so why are the words raising so many eyebrows this morning? >> u.s. diplomats out of cuba suffer strange and unexplained hearing loss. we'll tell you what's behind that. we'll talk with the former adviser to four u.s. ambassadors
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>> shannon: the justice departmenting a filing brief yesterday. arguing the justice should rule it's all about national security and not religion regardless of anything the president may have said during his campaign. challengers to the travel ban including a slew of immigrant rights tkpwhroups the state of hawaii will file their brief next month. the supreme court will hear oral arguments in october. >> how about that for speed?
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service officers that are over there, they'll come back. they'll be reassigned. they'll go somewhere else. they're not losing their jobs. who's losing their job are the ones who are local hires. there are many of those russians who are locally hired by the u.s. embassy. so i do think that it was a good kind of tongue and cheek message to which a lot of people reacted. i saw in my life a lot of people say, we have 755 people in russia? >> we do. but they're not all americans. i want to ask you about north korea. this is an on going issue. at day break the president tweeted military solutions are now fully in place, locked and loaded should north korea act unwisely. hopefully kim jong-un will find another path. couple things on that. we don't know what they saw overnight. is there some activity in north korea? yes? no? we don't know. you've got the editorial in china telling north korea don't
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make the first move because if you do, we will not have your back. what do you make of all that? >> look, i think we have a president who has a very credible threat of military action. not just a threat of military action, but it's credible. north korea knows that. south korea knows that. japan knows that. and china knows that. so this latest resolution that we just had of the u.n. is the toughest resolution we've had. it's very good. i do think that it needs to have oil sanctions which will really get the chinese attention. what we're hearing right now is the chinese are doing more, but there's more to be done. so i'm concerned on the diplomatic side that we really have to have a lot of solutions right now. dial back the military portion of this. diplomacy still has time to work. >> on this cuba matter. you're a diplomat yourself. why do these americans come home
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from havana with hearing loss? why was a canadian sent home with a similar affliction? it is a mystery at the moment. the government's investigating. what's your hunch? how does something like this happen? >> look, it is a mystery and we're very concerned about it. inside the state department, the preliminary belief is that something was done to affect these individuals. something was done by cubans, by cuban sympathizers. maybe the cuban government. but somehow there was a force that pushed this to happen. so i think we need a full investigation. we do have better relations with the cubans, although we still have a far way to go. so the state department wanted to allow these civilians the ability to come back home because they were getting sick. >> i'm just curious about
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motivation. what do we think could be at the root of this? >> well, look. we've had sour relations with the cubans for decades. so i think this is just lingering effects. certainly we need to get to the bottom of this to note if this was government pushed, government sanctioned, government implemented. >> rick, thanks. we will see as that mystery unfolds. thank you, rick. >> passenger jet out of miami forced to turn around midnight after several crew members got sick. we'll tell you what happened just ahead. plus, a police officer gunned down. it was all captured on the body cam he was wearing. how he's doing now and what happened to that man caught on tape. >> i'm hit. i'm hit. i'm hit in my neck. my arms are broken. help me, please.
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>> a jet blue flight returning to ft. lauderdale florida. flight attendants complained of headaches. one of them used on flight oxygen. the plane did not detect anything on board. yet more than 100 passengers complained of health complaints. >> here's the thing. >> what's that? >> do you like to fly? >> i'm a flyer. you're a trainer. >> trains can go from here to london, i'd take the tpraeupb. i would. when they go down i start to worry. >> might have been the food. just saying. >> you don't like the food?
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hmm. >> this is a stunning video capturing the moment a south carolina officer shot at point blank range. >> take your hands out your pockets. if you don't stop i'm gonna tase. >> that led to the attempted murder conviction of the man who shot him. that just takes your breath away. >> it does. >> that incident happened over a year ago. >> that video from officer quincy smith came from a body camera he said he purchased from amazon himself. he had the camera mounted on his
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eye glasses. turned it on as he began chasing after a suspect who had been harassing people at a local convenience store. it took a near deadly turn as he approached the suspect and was shot four times. >> stop! take your hands out your pocket! take your hands out your pocket! if you don't stop, i'm gonna tase. take your hands out your pocket. take your hands out your pocket! shots fired! >> he's literally running for his life. officer smith sustained a life threatening neck injury and two broken arm bones. as the video rolls on and we hear officer smith roll for help a good samaritan offers to stay with him, even taking over the police radio to explain what is happening to dispatchers. all while working to keep that
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officer calm on the ground. listen. >> yeah, i have seen you after that boy. seen you after him. i'm going to stay here with you. >> okay. thank you, sir. >> dispatch, please tell my family i love them. >> stunning. the gun man, malcolm orr was found guilty of attempted murder and was sentenced to 35 years wednesday following the two day trial. a go fund me page has helped raise over $4,000 for the officer who is currently out on medical leave. according to the latest stats from the national institute of justice, a sample of police department surveyed in 2013 shows approximately 75% of officers do not use body worn cameras whether or not they're available depends on the department. a number many people are hoping will be changing in coming years. >> wow. he purchased that himself for his own protection. thank you very much for update. >> see the dangers these officers deal with every day all across america.
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just look at that there. wow. stunning stuff. in a moment, the tiny island of g is in the international spotlight. how are the thousands who live there reacting to the latest threat? we'll take you live to find out. >> plus president trump says military options for north korea are locked and loaded. a prominent obama administration official said we can live with a nuclear north korea. we'll talk with a house committee member coming up. >> i noticed that many senators and others today came out very much in favor of what i said. but if anything, that statement may not be tough enough. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you.
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president trump doubling down on his promise on kim jong-un should he go through with a strike on g. >> he does something in guam it will be the likes of nobody has seen before what will happen to north korea. you'll see. and he'll see. he will see. it's not a dare. it's a statement. has nothing to do with dare. that's a statement. >> william la jeunesse is live in guam. >> reporter: this is an island. where you gonna go? you have 162,000 people. many of whom are u.s. citizens. most are. how far can they go in 14
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minutes? that's how long it would take for a missile to fly from north korea to guam. kim jong-un threatened guam before. now some are worried. >> obviously for me because i'm a father so it's really concerning. i wish that it didn't have to come to that. >> reporter: so why is north korea obsessed with guam? one simple geography. it's about 2,000 miles away, unlike san francisco and hawaii which are closer to 6,000. he feels confident he can hit his target with a medium range missile. secondly, he sees this u.s. territory as provocative. there are two military base here. one, a naval base where there are four nuclear submarines. also anderson air force base that is filled with fighters and bombers. the governor spoke to today. he said don't panic. washington has our back.
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they will defend u.s. soil. there's no need to take precautions. >> at this point there has been no change in the threat level either in a military base in guam or in our civilian community. >> reporter: so the guam delegate to congress, she has asked president trump to tone down his rhetoric. she said guam is not a bargaining chip. i will tell you, bill, there have been a few cancellations of hotels that are largely full with japanese and south koreans. >> william, thank you, on the island of guam. >> president trump saying america's military options are in place and quote locked and loaded should north korea act unwisely. just the latest in a group of new warnings from the president. >> maybe that statement wasn't tough enough and we're backed 100% by our military. we're backed by everybody. we're backed by many other leaders. you'll see. you'll see.
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>> mr. president one of the options to consider -- >> we don't talk about that. >> joining me now member of the house foreign affairs committee and air national guard pilot. thanks for your time today. >> you bet. thanks. >> what do you make of the president's statement about how ready we are? >> well, it's essential. when you look at how to do diplomacy, and this is something we've failed to do especially when it comes to north korea the last number of decades is, in order to have an effect with diplomacy you have to have a credible military option backing it up. it's the diplomatic instrument of power. stronger, is more successful military instrument of power to back it up. nobody is cheering for a military stpraoeubg or war in north korea, but diplomatic talk over the last couple of decades has led to a nuclear north korea. that's the big issue. so when you have this kind of
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freak out over the words. i would have said the words a little differently than president trump. but the fact is when you have this freakout over the words, it's because people aren't used to hearing this tough talk. tough talk needs to accompany a credible talk. to hopefully compel the north koreans to see that any provocative action will lead to the destruction not just of the regime, but kim jong-un will lose his life. that is a thing he treasures most. >> we have a united nations unanimous sanctions package, now the toughest ever. we talk about how it's not just about that goal, it's about getting people to enforce it. there are going to be key player. is it also a message for china, for others that these warnings aren't just for kim jong-un. >> yeah, absolutely. so right now china has this calculation that north korea, as
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annoying as they may be, is actually basically the buffer state against the west northern korean peninsula. we have to show a credible military option, which we have. it will be messy, but we have a credible military option, so they know if the regime continues to chase nuclear weapons and the final piece for a consistent icbm technology, that a war or attack in north korea would be a bigger detriment. 85% of commerce that goes into north korea crosses the chinese border. of course they can stop that from happening. they need to do it. i'm glad they got on the u.n. sanctions bill, finally. but it is now time to see action. otherwise i do fear, look, if north korea decides to launch four weapons at guam and we know they have the ability to marry those to a miniaturized nuclear weapon, to some extent we have to assume it's nuclear,
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otherwise you're rolling the dice. people that blame the rhetoric of trump for the behavior of the north korean regime are wrong. the north korean regime behavior has been going on long before president trump was even talking about running for president. >> i want to ask you about a piece that was written by our ambassador to the u.n., susan rice saying this. history shows that we can, if we must, tolerate nuclear weapons in north korea. the same way we tolerated the far greater threat of thousands of soviet nuclear weapons during the cold war. your reaction? >> let's say you believe that for a second, which i do not. say you believe that. you're trusting kim jong-un will act responsibly with his nuclear weapons. you've just given permission by saying we can accept it for iran to break the nuclear deal and build nuclear weapons. south korea will demand them. japan will demand them. any other rogue regime that decides they want to chase them.
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how do we ever enforce the nonproliferation treaty when we just said, it's okay, we can live with nor korea? >> want to ask you about the word that a bomb plot, there twr materials sent to australia with the hope of blowing up a flight out of sydney. that was foiled for any number of reasons. how worried are you that isis and its bad actors are able to ship things around the planet that we may not know about? >> well, i think we always need to be worried. what i say to people is don't stop flying on airplanes. don't live in the basement. enjoy your life. we're one of the greatest countries in the world that can defend. as isis lost territory, they're shifting to an al qaeda approach. they're going to go to long range terrorist strikes. this is a war we're going to be fighting probably for the rest of my life. so it's defeating them
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militarily, but also working on that next generation to deprive isis and al qaeda of their recruits. >> all right. always glad to have you with us. thanks. >> any time. thanks. >> 20 minutes before the hour. lot more coming out of the two news conferences from yesterday in bedminster. president trump taking a question about robert mueller. his latest thoughts on the russia investigation. intriguing comment, coming up. >> plus debbie wasserman schultz on the defensive amid calls for her to explain that extended employment of a former i.t. staffer at the center of a federal investigation. now some democrats are even demanding answers. >> this federal judge told the state department to stay at it, keep looking for missing hillary clinton e-mails that could be tied to the latest on ben ghazi. we'll talk with the lead attorney on the charge to uncover those e-mails next hour. >> we know this has been a drip drip drip sort of saga because
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>> the pentagon confirming pair of air strikes targeting al-shabaab in somalia. somalia's president said a high ranking al-shabaab leader was killed but the u.s. said it cannot confirm that and we are still assessing the impact of the strikes in that region. >> mr. president, you talked ab leading the dismissal of the general counsel. >> i haven't given it any thought. i have been reading about it from you saying i'm gonna dismiss him. i'm dismissing anybody. i want them to get on with the
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task. i also want the senate and house to come out with their findings. now, judging from the people leaving the meetings, leak, but they leave the meetings all the time and they say no, we haven't found any collusion. there was no collusion. do you know why? i don't speak to russian. look, i won because i suppose i was a much better candidate than her. >> there you have it from yesterday. no plans to fire the special counsel. also repeating no collusion with moscow. fox news contributor, former adviser to bill clinton, nan haywood. hello. >> good morning. >> i have got a bunch of stuff on my mind. can we get through this? >> absolutely. >> what do you think those comments suggest? when you think about his chief counsel telling reporters early in the week that he's been sending messages to robert mueller saying you're doing a great job. >> i think it indicates confidence. the president's con fended from the start that there's nothing there. i think this is a sign he feels the process is gonna work out.
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>> i think it represents good legal strategy because the worst thing you can do is attack a prosecutor especially someone who can bring charges. given donald trump's sometimes adversarial approach, both with jim comey, lowering the tone makes sense. >> normally someone would take a question and say i'm not gonna talk about it. not him. >> no, no. he takes these things on directly. >> topic for you. debbie wasserman schultz. i don't know what's happening with this i.t. investigation. i think there's more to unwind. now you're hearing from more democrats like nikki barnes said this. we wish she would go away and stop being so public by doubling down on negative stories. unfortunately debbie's name does not scream trust. it screams power. it screams limited access. it screams wikileaks now.
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dnc lawsuit. it screams a lot of negative things to the public. >> it's all true. >> true? >> yeah. i think so. look, debbie wasserman schultz has got this i.t. investigation where i guess it was mr. onram went back to pakistan, tried to go to pakistan, $283,000 wired there. we have the scandal unfolding. we have her efforts from e-mails that came out to basically rig the primaries for hillary clinton. i think the best thing for democrats is to have her to, have nancy pelosi, lower their voices and maybe go away. the democrats want to win in swing districts, neither of those two help. >> how restless is the democratic base when it comes to their leadership? how much talk is there to say, give us some fresh stphaeus >> there's a lot of talk for fresh faces. for those of us in the center,
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there's a lot of asking for those leaders to get off the stage 'cause we're not gonna win swing districts that we need to take the house with people like that fronting the party. as your comments suggest, bill, the party is divided. the agenda season clear. donald trump and the republican, despite all the issues they have, are probably poised to be able to hold the house as things stand now. >> here is now the republican swamp. talking about the irs, the investigation where she shares the following. donald trump promised to drain the swamp but here's a seven month progress report. the washington fog is still as wide as ever. consider that mr. trump's justice department has continued to defend the irs misdeeds under president obama. scathing. >> i agree. i think the irs has way too much
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to answer for. mr. cost should be gone. this administration said that swamp is very wide. i think the president has rightly prioritized at this point especially legislatively. tax reform from the code on down, obviously. and healthcare reform. with the senate minority able to bottle things up because of the filibuster which the president's talked ability. senator mcconnell needs to bust that filibuster. the president's calling for that so we can get healthcare reform. >> there's no sign that's going to happen. i think you know that. >> the public needs to understand it. they don't fully. the president is calling attention to it. >> he's attacking mitch mcconnell. >> he's attacking the senate process. >> the point is to this day no one has answered for the irs matter. >> they need to. she's right. >> seven month i.n.s. to this administration and nothing's
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changed. >> i agree. the irs under obama was an outrage. the investigation went away. i think kimberly strasle raises a fair point. i say as a democrat we have to be honest and nonpartisan. >> thank you very much. >> shannon what, is next? >> one young inventor kre kwraeu kwraeuting a product that could save children from dieing in hot cars. >> backlash from google. why the ceo's latest response is raising even more eyebrows this morning. jack knocked over a candlestick, onto the shag carpeting... ...and his pants ignited into flames, causing him to stop, drop and roll.
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colorado. check out this scene. >> oh my god. >> that's fort collins. hail the size of tennis balls in the front yard. that will bring out your camera. storm washed over the denver metro area. heavy rainfall causing flooding in some areas. check it out. >> texas leads the nation in the number of deaths involving young children left in hot cars. that issue inspired a young inventor to find a solution. get this. that 11-year-old already has a patent pending. we like a little bit of good news, casey. >> reporter: it is good news mixed with sad news. dfw area under yet another heat advisory today. just your typical august afternoon. temps expected to climb into the triple digits. just before 9:00 a.m., not too terribly bad. 84 degrees. but inside the tar, you've all
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seen these tests before, it's already 88 degrees. about four or five degrees warmer than outside. but once the sun gets going, these things heat up fast. let's start with some startling facts. first of all, a child in this country dies every eight days from what is known as child vehicular heat stroke. that is about 37 children each year. texas, for 2017 already matched the total for all of last year. area hospitals, volunteer organization, law enforcement all launched massive safety campaigns across america like children's health of dallas, where experts work to educate parents on how to prevent the unthinkable. >> something like leaving something in the back seat that you absolutely cannot go on your day without. for instance, your purse. your cell phone. some people have said take off one of your shoes and putted it
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in the back seat. >> reporter: 11-year-old bishop curry has his own plans to end the problem. he's invented a gadget called oasis. it straps to a car's head rest aimed at the child's head rest. it senses movement in the back seat once a car has been turned off and sensed an alert to local police with the car's gps coordinates. and to the parents phone. all while activating a fan to help cool the child until help arrives. >> my mission is to save one life. if i can save just one life, that's basically, yes, it worked. it proves that it worked. i'd be like, yeah. >> reporter: bishop has already met with people at toyota. he has attended a lot of conventions with top auto manufacturers. there has been legislation introduced in d.c. for
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automakers to install devices or technology to alert parents if a child is left behind because this is a preventible tragedy, shannon, and one that, unfortunately, happens too often here. >> what a sharp young man. love that guy. you too, casey. casey's also sharp. >> president trump sending a fresh warning to north korea. america's military says it's locked and loaded. we're getting new comments out of beijing, china. what that country says if pyongyang moves first. chris wallace takes it all on next.
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only block one. and 6 is greater than one. rethink your allergy relief. flonase sensimist. ♪ >> a high stakes feud with no end in sight. president trump picking up the pressure on senate majority leader mitch mcconnell for the failure to repeal obamacare and get a few other things done. welcome to a bran new hour of america's news room. did you think we were talking about north korea? that's a big feud, too. >> i'm bill hemmer.
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good morning as well. congress has a full plate. many republicans saying time to move on from health care and get to the other to do list and get the agenda back on track. president was asked whrorpb he thought it was time for mcconnell to step down. >> i'll tell you what. if he doesn't get repeal and replace done and if he doesn't get taxes done, meaning cuts and reform, and if he doesn't get a very easy one to get done, infrastructure, then you can ask me that question. >> peter ducey is live in washington with more. good morning, peter. let's talk about how long this has been brewing between president trump and the senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. >> the president said he's been frustrated ever since he showed up on his first day and there was not an obamacare repeal for him to sign. >> i just want him to get repeal and replace done. i have been hearing repeal and replace now for seven years but i have been only been doing this for two years. i have really only been doing
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this for six months. now it's almost two years. all i hear is repeal and replace. >> talk like that is making president trump a lot of friends. let a clean repeal repeal on the house to get members on the record whether or not it will get them repeal and replace. >> i'm with the american people. president is, too. they're frustrated. i saw it the last few days. people talking about what happened in the united states two weeks ago. i'm with the president saying that we should do what the people told us to do. >> this back and forth between mcconnell and the president started monday when mcconnell said the president had excessive expectations for repealing and replacing obamacare. >> they are on recess.
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will there be any movement during this break? >> yes. the administration has to decide by august 21st if they are going to pay insurance companies to participate in the market places, obamacare market places with cost sharing subsidies. if they don't, the markets may not stay stable. once recess is over, congress only has until september 29 to raise the debt ceiling and october 1st to fund the government or else it shuts down. shannon. >> all right, peter doocy, thank you very much. now to the latest on the north korean matter as the country's largest ally issues a warning to the united states. there's news from china. greg palcott reporting tphraoeufrb london. what is china saying today, greg? >> it remains a war of words between north korea and the united states, but some key players are already picking sides. yes, in fact, china, a neighbor of north korea, an ally of north
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korea. they're saying the foreign ministry that all sides should be cautious with their words and actions. they do say through the state media that if north korea strikes first, they will stay on the sidelines. they will stay neutral. but if the united states and south korea stage their own strike, china will, in the words of the media, prevent it. the major offensive role china played in the 1950s. things have heated up, due in part to the threat north korea has nied send missiles toward the u.s. pacific territory island of guam. b-1 bombers have been based there. another ally of the united states weighing in, in proximity to all this. australia, its prime minister saying if anything goes down, it stands shoulder to shoulder with the united states. >> is there more reaction from the korean peninsula?
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>> absolutely. on both sides of the dmz, south korea, the defense minister, saying to his troops that they should stand heightened readiness just in case there's any provocative moves from the north. he under scored, pentagon also under scoring august 21st u.s. and south korean forces will stage joint military exercises as planned. that's another thing that's gotten north korea a little bit upset from the regime of kim jong-un we get something out of state media. little bit obtuse. if the mainland of the united states should not feel safe according to one official editorial. the regime would use, in their words, ultimate means if anything untoward happens. very dangerous on both sides right now. >> no question. thank you, greg palkot reporting in london. so what are the military options? should the u.s. go to war with
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north korea? lieutenant colonel oliver north will talk more coming up. >> for more we go to chris wallace. good morning, chris. >> good morning, shannon. >> let's put out this political headline. pent up trump lets it rip on vacation. apparently the folks behind the administration didn't necessarily know that he was going to go so in depth with reporters. he touched on everything and doubled down on north korea from this working vacation. >> yeah. it is very interesting. for the last week or so we've been hearing talk about there's a new record, new discipline in the white house. that the president is not gonna tweet as much. that he's not going to have an open door policy letting advisers go in and out. the president gets a say in that. he had it yesterday, twice. both outside the golf club and then inside in a national security briefing with his vice president and national security
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adviser. and we are told by reporters who were in the room that his press secretary sarah huckabee sanders was standing in the back of the room of that 20 minute news conference very on holding up a sign saying one more question that the president could see. and the president ignored it and kept answering questions on everything from north korea to mitch mcconnell to the raid of paul manafort's house to putin kicking hundreds of diplomats out of the kremlin, or rather out of moscow. you don't tell the president what to do. he decides what he's going to do. >> he seems like he enjoys the interchange with reporters. he knows that as much as it can be unfiltered, when he's one on one with them in the room, he can often take control of the conversation or at least speak his mind and say what he wants to say. doing it twice yesterday seemed a little unusual. >> well, again, i think he was maybe making a point. not only to the rest of the world but maybe to his own
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staff. if i want to talk, i'm gonna talk and nobody's gonna stop me from talking. afterwards kelly anne conway said the president has been eager and wanting to share his views in one of the juice kwrefrbgt her words, juiceiest times in his administration. this is a time when there's a lot of news out there. the president made even more news by responding to questions from reporters on a host of issues. >> one thing that captured a lot of headlines. he was asked if mitch mcconnell should step down. he didn't say yes. but gave a laundry list. if he doesn't get tax reform, infrastructure, then come talk to me. all tweeted, mitch, get back to work and put repeal and replace, tax reform and cuts and a great infrastructure bill on my desk for signing. you can do it. lot of carrot and stick when it comes to these two. >> even a lot of trump supporters are curious about that.
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newt gingrich, who will be a panelist on our fox news sunday this week and has been very supportive of the president, said he wondered thab. one of the points he said, it's not like president trump is just a bystander in repeal and replace. he's part of the team. while the republicans and you can argue the president's frustrations that the fact is that they ended up three republicans ended up voting against repeal and replace. ended up going down in defeat. the president never made a speech. never went on television. it was solely devoted to obamacare. lot of republicans are saying he could have done nor help in the effort to corral those 50 votes and allow vice president the 50th vote to pass praoel and replace. >> how much do they need each other, mcconnell and president trump? >> not a lot. they talk on the phone.
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according to my source, they are different people. mcconnell is very controlled, doesn't like using extra words. that is not a description of donald trump. one of the other interesting aspects of this, there's an increasing suggestion perhaps trump has decided he is going to continue to campaign as the outsider, not only against the swamp in washington but against the republican majority. question is, if you get to 2018 and there's been nothing accomplished, president trump can say, look, i want a whole new set of democrats in there and want a republican majority. but i also want a whole new set of republican, is he going to support people to the right of the incumbents in there already? how does he look? if he think hess's got problems with a republican majority, if they end up with a democratic majority in the house or senate, he doesn't know what trouble
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will be. >> washington could get even more interesting. this has been a very busy august. we know you'll have plenty to talk about on sunday. coming up much more on fox news sunday and the north korean threat including an exclusive interview with senator lindsey graham right here on the fox news channel. you don't want to miss it. not a boring august at all. >> i think it's refreshing in a lot of ways. how many years have we sat here and talked to fi senators who will filibuster. remember the day he walked into the east room and did that impromptu press conference. meet the attorney who told the state department to keep looking for e-mails on the benghazi matter. >> the state department is refusing to meet its obligation under the freedom of information act. we had filed this case over two
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years ago. we asked for all of secretary clinton's e-mails regarding benghazi. >> that attorney is next on how she made her case. >> isis finding another creative way to carry out operations right here in the u.s. how the islamic terror group is reportedly funneling money to its agents. >> this update on a story we first brought you yesterday. a veteran being asked to give up his second amendment rights in order to become a foster parent to his grandson. ke up. when life keeps you up... zzzquil helps you fall asleep in less than 20 minutes. >> god gave me the right to defend my family and i'm noted willing to give up that right. it's more of a response bltd for me. i'm not gonna let a state agency tell me i can't do that any more.
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from the outside. another people or agency. but not the ones that might be in its own server. part of the judge's opinion. this is a president obama appointee. said although the agency need not move heaven and earth to uncover every record, it cannot conclude its search if there are additional searchs that are unlikely to turn up the information requested. there are questions about whether the e-mails that would be relevant to this would still be archived somewhere, would still be on a server. what are your hopes that you'll get anything new? >> i it this's likely that we'll get something new. we know her 55,000 pages of e-mails was not a complete set of all of her e-mails. those were hand picked and
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selected by her attorneys. there were e-mails that may have been lost or destroyed or deleted. another case a judicial watch has against the state department, i believe the count is up to 500 e-mails or so between secretary clinton and huma abadean that were not returned by secretary clinton. so we know that's not a complete set. these three were her most trusted senior aides who the state department itself admitted that they were heavily involved on the subject matter of the attacks in benghazi. >> the state department, one of their arguments said the searchs would not be fruitful. this wasn't enough for the judge. >> that's the law. the law obligates the state department or any agency to search the system of records where it is reasonably expected that records will be found.
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it is more than reasonable to expect that hillary clinton communicated with her senior aides. it can't be disputed that secretary clinton did not return all of her e-mails from the state department. >> okay. so it took you two years to convince this judge. now the state department will have to undertake this search. i understand there are many cases that judicial watch is involved with as well. do you think others will bear fruit on the issue of benghazi? >> yes. we have a couple issues still pending. we have the case in front of judge lambert where discovery has been granted and we are just waiting for the court to issue an order what discovery will be permitted. i believe judicial watch has nine cases pending. in this particular lawsuit t state department is moving forward will have to update the court by september 22nd as to its supplemental search and the production. >> for folks who think this
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matter is settled, it is far from. ramona, thank you for your time. >> sure. thank you. >> check out this video. refugee crisis brought front and center in this dramatic moment. what a scene this is. we'll fell you where it's unfolding and where all these migrants ran once they hit the shore. plus google at the center of a heated debate about diversity and free speech. why our next guest argues you can get fired for google if you've got the wrong opinion. says all you have to do, google it. >> i want you to know that there's a place for you in this industry. there's a place for you at google. don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
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stunning video. a boat care rig migrants suddenly going ashore surprising tourists on a beach in spain. sun bathers looking on in amazement. they quickly disembarked. the group vanished before any authorities arrived. spain has seen a surge in migrants from northern africa. >> question is where do they go? okay. google now facing new fallout in this debate over gender diversity. what a story this has become. this after the company fired an engineer after writing a memo saying women are not as equipped for engineering jobs as men are. the ceo told employees this. googlers are writing in concerned about safety and worried that they may be outed for publicly for asking a question in a town hall in
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recognition of googlers concerns. we need to create a better set of conditions for us to have the discussion. end quote. so the discussions cancelled. now we'd like to see what google does next. bernie goldberg is writing about this. bernie, i'll get to your piece in a moment. the irony of having a diversity meeting that's cancelled because some believe they would be either publicly outed for their political views or ridiculed by their colleagues. this is rich. >> under statement of the week, bill. so you have a diversity meeting presumably this is one of the rare kinds of diversity that they care about, which is diversity of opinion. but there may be opinions that are unacceptedable to certain people so you call off the meeting. you can't make this up. if you're going to have a diversity of opinion meeting, allow diversity of opinion. tell people not to be such
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babies that they're afraid of what might happen if they express an unpopular view. either you're open to opposing views or you're not. and i suspect, i suspect that the few conservatives at google think they're not open to their kinds of opinions. >> i would encourage folks to check out "the wall street journal" piece that was filed online. they quote a lot of employee, anonymously now, who express that viewpoint, who believed that they were being singled out, let's say. i'll leave it at that. >> conservative employees. >> have the wrong opinion, you can get fired. google it. in your piece you say the following, if google had followed james demore for being naive, they'd have a case. but they did not. they fired him for having an unacceptable position. that can't happen at google. do you think you got that nailed
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down, bernie? >> i think that was my best sentence in the piece. look, what's happening, what's been happening on college campuses for quite a while now is now happening in corporate america. that very simply is this, bill. certain views are acceptable. certain views are not acceptable. and liberals are the ones who will make that decision. okay? that's why i believe that so-called progressives, not all of them, but too many of them, are stalinists. any views they don't like, they want to crush. to state the obvious. i am not an evolutionary biologist. so i don't know if james demore, the guy who got fired, is factually right or wrong. he's a harvard ph.d.. he's a bright guy. he put out a provocative interesting opinion about why there's a disparity, why there are far more men working in silicon valley than women. let's listen to him.
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you don't fire him for that. bill, tphrz one thing we know for sure. if he had written that ten page document and said women make better employees in silicon valley because they're more congeneal, more collaborative, they listen to other people better than men, he would have never been fired. he might have gotten a promotion. they might have made a bronze statue and put it on the campus of google. but he would have never gotten fired. because certain stereotypes are unacceptable and other stereotypes are more than acceptable. >> check out david brooks' piece in "the new york times" today, too. he lays the blame at the feet of the ceo. said he got himself in a big mess and no real good way out of it. bernie, thanks for coming on. >> thanks, bill. >> you bet. thank you. >> isis running its terror network with the click of a mouse. how terrorists are reportedly
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exploiting one of the most popular websites to help fund its evil operation. >> very interesting story. locked and loaded. president trump warning north korea the u.s. is ready to act militarily if it is necessary. what options do we have? lieutenant colonel oliver north on deck with his insights next. >> i noticed that many senators and others today came out very much in favor of what i said. but if anything, that statement may not be tough enough. >> what would be tougher than fire and fury? >> you'll see.
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alshanawi, a maryland native. the wall street journal reported yesterday the government alleges he pretended to sell computer printers on ebay as a cover to receive payments from isis. tapped phone calls vealed he once confided that he dreamed of killing people in a church. on other occasions he communicated about building a bomb. the report claims he was part of an isis organization that used ebay to funnel money. it was master minded by isis director of computers who was later killed in a drone attack. e bail told fox news in a statement ebay has zero tolerance for criminal activity on our market place and we worked with law enforcement to bring this person to justice. pay pal works closely with law enforcement including in this matter and responds quickly to lawful requests to support
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agencies in their investigations. the company pro-actively reports any suspicious activities investing significant time and resources into our vigilant efforts to prevent terrorist activity on our platforms. >> doug, isis also apparently mailed explosives or bomb components from turkey to australia. what more are we learning about that? >> shows they are internationally still very active. these were high grade military explosives. australian authorities called it a sophisticated plot that nearly worked. four men disguised the bomb as a meat grinder. it was sent to australia via air cargo. there it was picked up by one of the suspects who intended to give it to his unsuspecting brother who was scheduled to fly on a commercial flight last july. the bomb never made it through airport security. lot of people can be thankful for that. >> doug mcelway, thank you.
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>> my pleasure. >> i think we have a president who has a very credible threat of military action. not just a threat of military action, but it's credible. north korea knows that, south korea knows that, japan knows that and china knows that. >> that was last hour here as president trump turns up the heat on north korea saying the u.s. military is locked and loaded and ready for action as kim jong-un makes a wrong move. what are the options? lieutenant colonel oliver north, author of the book "counterfeit lies" and a host of war stories. how are you doing? >> doing well. counterfeit of lies are showing how they're funding their nuclear program without the iranians. >> you write to end the korean crisis, donald trump must convince china we're deadly serious about military action. how far to that end has he gone?
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>> apparently not far enough because president xi has not done what he needs to do. what has to happen is that the bureau in beijing needs to be convinced that we will take military action if this continues. they hold all the cards. they can play it any way they want. but they don't want 5 million ref few skwreus rushing across their border and becoming boat people heading to china from north korea. bottom line is, xi is our best card. it's in xi's interest to do these things. what he needs to know is this president is not going to back down. i suggest ten items the president could use to convince xi of that. those deployments of those items in that fox news.com column, those are the ideas that will help convince xi he has to act because it's not going to be pretty. everybody has said that. probably the most words were used by secretary of defense when he described it will be a catastrophe.
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it certainly will be for north korea. it will be potentially for south korea if you don't beef up their ability to stop the artillery coming. those are clear indicators that the united states is preparing to act. xi needs to be convinced. quite frankly, the last tight em, xi could be the guy who saves it. what i suggested is prime minister abe from japan get on a plane, go to beijing and tell xi to his face. you can be the man who walked us back from the brink and dealt with the north korean problem. not just a problem for japan and south korea and the united states. it is a major problem for china. >> i got your ten points right here. we'll tell our viewer, too, on dot com. sit significant, as chinese run newspaper said to north korea today, if you attack the united states you're on your own. we do not have your back. >> well, it is significant. so, too, is the vote in the united nations. when both china and russia
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joined us in that vote to sanction them. the problem with sanctions is they take too damn long. bottom line of it is this is something that needs to be shut down in days not weeks or months or years. it's never happened because china was never there with us. this is a clear signal they are. >> here's a tweet from earlier today from the president. military solutions are not fully in place locked and loaded should north korea act unwisely. hopefully kim jong-un will find another path. we'll await more word out of bedminster. susan rice wrote this in "the new york times." either mr. trump is issuing an empty threat of nuclear war which will further erode american krebltd or he actually intends more next time mr. kim acts provocatively. the first scenario is folly but the united states decision to start a war on the korean peninsula in the absence of an imminent threat would be hraoupbny. i'll ask you what you think
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about that. >> her suggestions are, do not recognize north korea's nuclear power. stop the bombastic rhetoric. all of those things have been done for decades now. >> on top of it, it denies reality. north korea is, by the remembering conning of our intelligence services, it is today a nuclear power. they have nuclear weapons and the means of delivering them all the way to the united states. now, we can look back later on and find out why the obama administration didn't do more to stop it. we can look back and find out why they didn't do more to reveal the clueing that was going on between kay ran and pyongyang. the bottom line of it is, united states of america, where you are, right where i am, are null srerable to a north korean attack. unlike destruction under the reagan era when i was there at the white house, we were pretty sure, as was john kennedy that the soviets wanted to survive the experience and therefore it
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was unlikely that they were going to launch a strike on us. the bottom line of it is, there's no such assurance for the people running the governments in tehran or pyongyang. their view of life is not one that suits us if we're looking at the future. they need to stop this program. they need to stop it in tehran as well. this is a very clear signal of what happens when one of these countries gets those kinds of weapons. >> thank you, sir. colonel, in washington, d.c. to our viewers, make sure you check out oliver north as he hosts war stories over the weekend airing 8 and 10 p.m. eastern time saturday night on the fox business network. thank you sir. >> a democratic congress woman calling out nra saying it's become a national security threat. also pointing the point at dana lash. just ahead, a second amendment advocate answers those charges. >> there's nothing on which they're basing this. if they're concerned about
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accidental deaths involving children, it's car accidents, it's drowning, shannon. there are a number of other causes that rank so much more higher than accidental gun deaths. patients that i see that complain about dry mouth they feel that they have to drink a lot of water medications seem to be the number one cause for dry mouth. i like to recommend biotene. it replenishes the moisture in your mouth. biotene definitely works! i just want to find a used car without getting ripped off. you could start your search at the all-new carfax.com that might help. show me the carfax. now the car you want and the history you need are easy to find. show me used trucks with one owner. pretty cool.
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>> a follow-up to a story we told you about yesterday. to be able to carry concealed weapon while caring for his grandson as his foster parent. >> i learned in the marine corps, i was highly trained in the use of firearms, so my grandson is safer with me being armed than not armed. my personal opinion is our constitution is a god given thing. god gave me the right to defend my family and i'm not willing to give up that right. it's more of a responsible for me. >> senior vice president of government and public affairs for the national shooting sports
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foundation joins me to talk about the case. good morning, larry. >> good morning, shannon. >> so this gentle man said he's a veteran. he said he started using guns as a young kid. he hunts. there are coyotes and bears near the property. he said that at some point state officials told him you will have to give up your constitutional rights, also give up the serial numbers of every gun you have if you want to foster your grandson who is in a tough situation. i know this isn't the only state where this is happening. what do you make of it? >> the supreme court decided that individuals have a fundamental civil liberty, individual constitutional right to keep and bear arms. so they have a right to have a firearm for self-protection. that's the apex of the right. you also have a right to carry a firearm. that a state would say you have
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to give up your constitutional right is troubling. is the state gonna tell you what books to read under your first amendment right? that's very troubling to see a state say that. i see states moving in the opposite direction. texas and nevada more recently have changed their laws to address these regulations that were put in place long before the decisions by the authority. michigan needs to re-evaluate the situation and recognize they are infringing upon a constitutional right. why the government would feel the need to ask for serial numbers. why does the government need that piece of information? i think michigan needs to evaluate the situation. the grandparents filed a lawsuit to challenge these regulations. michigan needs to re-evaluate the situation. >> we're going to follow the case. we had dana lash to talk about
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it yesterday. we all now after speaking with her, she is a very vocal advocate on gun rights and the second amendment. we have a tweet from a democratic congress woman saying this. i'm just going to say it. nra and dana lash are becoming domestic security threats under president trump. we can't ignore that. dana had a response of her own saying rephrase an elected government official just labeled me and millions of others domestic security threats. wow. your response? >> that's over the top. what an embarrassment. she's a former prosecutor. citizens in her county died in the tragedy september 11. for her to equate nra members to being domestic security threats is really troubling. what we need in this country is a lot less vitrial and politics in our public discourse and she
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ought to apologize for that statement. it's over the top and uncled for. she may not agree but to accuse 5 million nra members of being threats is over the top. >> this is a country where people can speak freely. you think that it speaks to a larger point about some on the left who want to sreul tpaoeu anybody who is a law abiding gun owner in this country and lump them altogether. does it suggest tone deafness of maybe why there are were so many people who didn't vote for their candidate last fall? >> it's a very controversial issue for many people. it's obviously this congress woman, i presume she made this over the top statement for political purposes. maybe she intends to try to raise campaign funds off of it. i don't know. she ought to apologize.
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it's really inappropriate. there are millions of law abiding americans who kper sides their constitutional rights and the second amendment. her first amendment rights are protected by the second amendment. she just owes an apology. she shouldn't speak like that. particularly as an elected public official. it's uncled for, inappropriate and i doesn't serve civil discourse on legitimate policy differences. >> we'll stand by to see if an apology is forth coming. in the mean time, thank you for your time. >> coming up, melissa francis has a preview of what's cooking down there. >> i sure do. media fire storm over president trump's tough talk on north korea. but is the reaction to trump's rhetoric legitimate or is the press overreacting? our media panel will weigh in. plus, a cop gunned down in broad daylight. it is all caught on video. the body cam footage giving a terrifying look at what officers are up against every single day.
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a young texas inventor coming up with a high tech solution to hot car deaths. what the seubg grader developed to save lives. it is all top of the hour. >> thanks, melissa. in a moment, incredible video catching the moment a car falls from above. that's gonna leave a mark. find out what happened in a moment. also, guess which business amazon is going after next. you always pay your insurance on time. tap one little bumper and up go your rates. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. liberty mutual insurance.
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this could be big business, jeff. what's happening? it's a growing business. ticket master owns most of this business for venues like the one behind me, the chicago theater. but i'll tell ya, amazon is now into pretty much everything. ticket master, owned by live nation. they released earnings yesterday. everything way up. they sold 12 million more tickets this time this year than they did last year. profits are up, sales are up. it's just a growing business. >> and doesn't ticket master have exclusive rights to venues and events? if that's the case, you talk about lot of negotiating, right? >> exactly. it's gonna cost amazon to get into this business but they believe it is growing and that they can do away with some of those deals and make a better deal. amazon is famous for not wanting to make a profit so that could drive prices down.
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these day, what do you want? there's a retail ice age. people don't want things. they don't need another shirt or tie. what they want is an experience. what to them might be a live sporting event, live music. that's why that business is growing. >> could be changing face. thank you, jeff. nice to see you in chicago. >> nice to see you, bill. >> president trump vowing that the military is locked and loaded, while north korea said it could reduce the u.s. mainland to ashes. a live report from the state department coming up at the top of the hour.
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>> bill: check out this video of an incident from last month and a parking garage. that car plunged from the seventh floor in austin, texas, slamming in the back of that su suv. the driver said she had the gas pedal by mistake and broke through a barrier. get this. the driver of the car and the suv only suffered minor injurie
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injuries. that's why you wear your seat belt. i'd watch that again. >> shannon: we'll see. we know some people. i've got a story that you do want to miss. channing tatum -- there is a video. seven floors, unbelievable. channing tatum shows off the magic mike moves, not the full during a stop at a north carolina convenience store, check it out. ♪ he was getting footloose there with the store clerk just north of charlotte, streamed the whole thing on facebook live. he's driving across country to promote his new nascar themed movie. ed comes out next friday. he is using the moves that you perfected. >> bill: that was just paying for gas.
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it is august, do not let it pass you by. see you on monday. >> shannon: "happening now" starts right now. >> jon: we begin with a fox news alert and an escalating war of words between president trump and north korea. good morning to you, welcome to "happening now," i am scott. >> melissa: and i'm melissa francis. this is president trump faces criticism for his tone on the nuclear threat including his most recent fire and fury comments. the president defending himself with this. >> frankly, the people who question that statement if it was too tough, maybe ed wasn't tough enough. they've been doing this to our country for a long time, for many years, and it's about time that somebody stuck up for the people of this country and for the people of other
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